When analyzing the long-term potential of a project, the token distribution model is a crucial factor. Solayer's token $LAYER has a total supply of 1 billion tokens, with 51.23% allocated to community incentives, 17.11% to the team, 16.66% to investors, and the remaining portion used for ecological funds and strategic reserves.

From the advantages, this design ensures that the community has a dominant position in ecological development. Over half of the tokens entering the incentive pool means that users have the opportunity to earn rewards through interactions, staking, payments, and other means at an early stage.

For the project, this helps attract users, expand the community size, and create strong engagement.

However, on the other hand, this model may also bring short-term pressure. The release of a large amount of community incentives can easily create selling pressure in the early stages. If ecological applications do not land in a timely manner, users may be more inclined to "take rewards and sell tokens" rather than hold them for the long term.

This requires Solayer to continuously advance in applications and adoption to convert incentives into retention.

Overall, Solayer's token distribution is a "user-first" strategy that reflects the community-driven development logic.

Its long-term value does not depend on a single distribution ratio but rather on whether it can turn LAYER into a truly valuable asset through applications and ecology.

@Solayer #BuiltonSolayer